Book Launch: The Good Sea by Vannessa Hearman
A person stands in front of a wall of colorful bookshelves, holding a book titled “The Good Sea” and wearing a patterned scarf and dark outfit.
Join us in celebrating the launch of The Good Sea: The Journey of The Tasi Diak and the Politics of Refugee Protection in Australia.
Dr Jude Conway will launch The Good Sea, a new book by Associate Professor Vannessa Hearman. The book tells the story of the only successful crossing between East Timor and Australia during the 24 years of Indonesian rule, which was undertaken by a refugee boat called the Tasi Diak. Drawing on archives, government records, media reports and interviews with the asylum seekers, The Good Sea traces the lives of young East Timorese activists on board and the powerful impact of the boat's arrival on Australia's relationship with Indonesia in the last years of the Suharto regime.
Associate Professor Vannessa Hearman from Curtin University is an historian of Southeast Asia specialising in Indonesia and Timor-Leste. Her first book, Unmarked Graves: Death and Survival in the Anti-Communist Violence in East Java, Indonesia, won the Asian Studies Association of Australia’s inaugural Early Career Book Prize in 2020. Her research deals with the effects of the Cold War in Asia, Australia’s engagements with Asia and the Pacific, and struggles for historical justice and human rights.
Dr Jude Conway, editor of Step by Step: Women of East Timor, Stories of Resistance and Survival (2010), was an activist with Australians for a Free East Timor in Darwin in the 1990s. In 1995, she and other Darwin-based activists and members of the East Timorese community kept a watch for the Tasi Diak, to reach Darwin. Jude became friends and fellow activists with a number of the Timorese from the boat and lobbied the Australian government over its refusal to grant them permanent residence.
Joining them is Jose da Costa, an East Timorese writer and actor who came to Australia aboard the Tasi Diak.
The launch is sponsored by the University of Newcastle’s College of Human and Social Futures and co-hosted by the Centre for the Study of Violence and the Hunter East Timor Sisters. Vannessa Hearman’s visit is supported by the School of Media, Creative Arts and Social Inquiry at Curtin University.
When: 6th July | 5pm-6:30pm
Where: Room X803, Level 8, NUSpace, Newcastle City Campus
Event Information
- Date: This in person event will be held on Monday 6 July 2026 from 5:00pm - 6:30pm
- Location: NUSpace
- Room: Room X803, Level 8
- Campus: Newcastle (City)
The University of Newcastle acknowledges the traditional custodians of the lands within our footprint areas: Awabakal, Darkinjung, Biripai, Worimi, Wonnarua, and Eora Nations. We also pay respect to the wisdom of our Elders past and present.